-
Kenya's economy faces climate change risks: World Bank
-
Germany targets oil firms to prevent wartime price gouging
-
EU to help reopen blocked oil pipeline in Ukraine
-
Cash handouts, fare hikes as Philippines battles soaring fuel costs
-
Indonesia weighs response to price pressures from Middle East war
-
In Hollywood, AI's no match for creativity, say top executives
-
Nvidia chief expects revenue of $1 trillion through 2027
-
Nvidia making AI module for outer space
-
Migrant workers bear brunt of Iran attacks in Gulf
-
Trump vows to 'take' Cuba as island reels from oil embargo
-
Equities rise on oil easing, with focus on Iran war and central banks
-
Nvidia rides 'claw' craze with AI agent platform
-
Damaged Russian tanker has 700 tonnes of fuel on board: Moscow
-
Talks towards international panel to tackle 'inequality emergency' begin at UN
-
EU talks energy as oil price soars
-
Swiss government rejects proposal to limit immigration
-
Ingredients of life discovered in Ryugu asteroid samples
-
Why Iranian drones are hard to stop
-
France threatens to block funds for India over climate inaction
-
"So proud": Irish hometown hails Oscar winner Jessie Buckley
-
European bank battle heats up as UniCredit swoops for Commerzbank
-
Italian bank UniCredit makes bid for Germany's Commerzbank
-
AI to drive growth despite geopolitics, Taiwan's Foxconn says
-
Filipinas seek abortions online in largely Catholic nation
-
'One Battle After Another' wins best picture Oscar
-
South Koreans bask in Oscars triumph for 'KPop Demon Hunters'
-
'One Battle After Another' dominates Oscars
-
Norway's Oscar winner 'Sentimental Value': a failing father seeks redemption
-
Indonesia firms in palm oil fraud probe supplied fuel majors
-
Milan-Cortina Paralympics end as a 'beacon of unity'
-
It's 'Sinners' vs 'One Battle' as Oscars day arrives
-
Oscars night: latest developments
-
US Fed expected to hold rates steady as Iran war roils outlook
-
It's 'Sinners' v 'One Battle' as Oscars day arrives
-
US mayors push back against data center boom as AI backlash grows
-
Who covers AI business blunders? Some insurers cautiously step up
-
Election campaign deepens Congo's generational divide
-
Courchevel super-G cancelled due to snow and fog
-
Middle East turmoil revives Norway push for Arctic drilling
-
Iran, US threaten attacks on oil facilities
-
Oscars: the 10 nominees for best picture
-
Spielberg defends ballet, opera after Chalamet snub
-
Kharg Island bombed, Trump says US to escort ships through Hormuz soon
-
Jurors mull evidence in social media addiction trial
-
UK govt warns petrol retailers against 'unfair practices' during Iran war
-
Mideast war cuts Hormuz strait transit to 77 ships: maritime data firm
-
How will US oil sanctions waiver help Russia?
-
Oil stays above $100, stocks slide tracking Mideast war
-
How Iranians are communicating through internet blackout
-
Global shipping industry caught in storm of war
An ocean away, Russian-Americans feel backlash from Putin's war
In the days after Vladimir Putin sent troops into Ukraine, the Russian School of Mathematics, a network of popular after-school academies across the United States, felt it had no choice but to speak out.
Calling the war "a source of great, real, and concrete pain for all of us," the school made clear in a statement: "We stand with the Ukrainian people against Putin, his regime, and the Russian military invasion of Ukraine."
It also urged patrons not to conflate the school with the Kremlin's actions.
As Russian bombs level Ukrainian cities, the horror is acute among Russian-Americans, many of whom also have relatives and friends in both Russia and Ukraine.
And as Russian-themed restaurants face vandalism and threats in US cities and Russian musicians are dropped from lineups -- some feel Putin's war has cast a shadow over their entire community and heritage.
Founded in Boston 25 years ago by two Jewish refugees from Belarus and Ukraine who were educated in Saint Petersburg, the math school explained that it was named after the "historic tradition of Russian mathematics."
"Regardless of their country of origin, no one is responsible for this war but Putin and his regime," it wrote.
- 'Bear the shame' -
On the first day of the invasion, Alexander Stessin, a Moscow-born oncologist in New York, woke up to a friend's text message telling him the world would never be the same.
"It was absolute shock, absolute horror, and that feeling hasn't subsided," said Stessin. "For me, it felt like my whole world came crashing down."
Nearly 2.5 million Americans are of Russian ancestry, according to the US census bureau, and the community of Soviet-born immigrants with links to Russian culture, many of them Jewish refugees, is larger still.
Stessin's own family emigrated in 1990 when Stessin was 11, but he maintained deep ties to the country of his birth, publishing award-winning books in Russia.
The 43-year-old is well aware his pain is "nothing compared to what the Ukrainian people have to bear."
But nonetheless, he says, "I think we will all have to bear the shame by virtue of being Russian, we cannot escape it."
- 'Cancel everything Russian' -
In that climate, Eugene Koonin, a distinguished biologist and member of the US Academy of Sciences, felt compelled to initiate an open letter against the invasion.
Signed by several dozen Russian-speaking scientists hailing from the former Soviet Union who work at the National Institutes of Health, a flagship US research agency, it condemned Putin's "aggressive, genocidal, pointless war."
But in an interview with AFP, Koonin also spoke out against international academic journals returning papers submitted by Russian scientists, and collaboration with Russian scholars being halted by governments or university councils.
"Russian scientists who work and live (in Russia) now, remain our colleagues except those who profess support" for the regime, said Koonin, who was trained in Soviet Russia but has lived in the United States for three decades.
"They deserve our compassion and help," he said, warning that "blanket prohibitive action" against Russian academics was "short-sighted and detrimental."
As the war spills deep into the cultural sphere, Stessin likewise warned against the temptation to "cancel everything Russian" -- regardless of any ties to Putin's regime.
While New York's Metropolitan Opera and Carnegie Hall invoked support for Moscow in cutting ties with star soprano Anna Netrebko and conductor Valery Gergiev, orchestras in Cardiff and Zagreb went further by removing Pyotr Tchaikovsky from their programming.
In Stessin's view, that approach is both "easy" and "very damaging."
"Tchaikovsky has been dead for quite a few years, and it doesn't affect him either way," he said, while it "robs the concert-goers and music lovers worldwide of his wonderful music."
Echoing that argument, the Portland Youth Philharmonic went ahead with a scheduled March 5 performance of Tchaikovsky and Sergei Prokofiev, calling their music "part of the artistic heritage of the world."
- 'Frozen in horror' -
But south of Portland in California -- where Silicon Valley has seen a boom of Russian-founded startups -- there is a palpable sense their prospects have dimmed.
"The Russian-speaking tech community has frozen in horror," said Nick Davidov, who moved to the state from Russia in 2015 and now runs an investment fund focused on tech companies together with his wife Marina.
Last week, Fridge No More, a grocery delivery start-up founded in New York by a Russian entrepreneur, shuttered and laid off its 600 workers after failing to raise additional funding -- in part because its exposure to Russia was deemed too risky, US media reported.
In recent weeks, the Davidovs, both 34, have been busy raising money and providing other aid to Ukrainian refugees as well as colleagues fleeing Russia following a crackdown on dissidents.
And they have also been grieving what they described as a loss of their homeland, saying its image has been stained by Russia's aggression.
"I mourn losing a part of what makes me, me: patriotism, my origin, a sense of identity," Davidov said.
A.Mykhailo--CPN